Help, please. In twenty-plus years of raising butterflies I never expertienced mortality of catapillar such as I'm going through right now. Here's my situation....
I'm using 10 gallon aquariums, some with foll-schreen tops, some with plywood and screen tops. Inside I use a paper towel liner to cover the floor for easier cleaning. Aquariums are cleaned every night with fresh food put in. I sometimes wipe the inside glass clear of webs, and occasionally I wipe out the floor with dilute bleach water to counter-act odor.
Other environmental factors are air-conditioning with a constant 71 degrees. Ours is a smoke-free house.
The symptons I observe are one) a lack of eating, and two) lethary. After hatching they don't grow at the usual pace. They crawl onto the side of the aquarium and stay there and die.
The early summer batch of 500 catapillars had approximately 6-8 die, some by parasite. Now with the late summer batch I'm losing 12 per day in one aquarium. The other aquariums have some mortality, but minor compared to this one problem aquarium. Eggs and milweed have come from a variety of locales, so I cannot attribute the problem to a known problem location, but I never gather beside cornfields.
Death occurs at all stages, even changing from the "J" to a chrysallis. The catapillar body turns brownish and hangs in a "V" with only the mid-body feet attached to the glass. I sometimes notice a yellowish/brown fluid secreted from the body onto the glass.
I clean areas of aquarium, cover, and tools with dilute bleach. I cannot transfer the whole population because of chrysallises attached. When I have catapillars out for cleaning I allow them to transfer themselves to new leaves before returning them to the aquarium. I see that some catapillar stools are red instead of the usual green.
Help! I really enjoy the process of doing this, but it's very discouraging after all the work to lose so many! With such a large first batch here in June I thought I'd have a banner crop for tagging this fall, but I've done only 59 so far.
